Dear readers.
Animal enrichment is part of our syllabus and course for this year. Before this year we helped the other 2nd years with their projects but never really understood the meaning and purpose of it. Enrichment is by definition the fighting of boredom. This is where you use a way to get the animal to not be bored in the enclosure the whole day either by interacting and playing or changing things like feeding methods or even just by creating its natural habitat in the enclosure that it will be staying in for the certain time frame.
In the next couple of photos I will show you a few different ways of enrichment and how you can implement it with the animals we have at the centre.
*Conserving Moira*
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Animal injuries
Dear readers.
The past couple of weeks have been sort of hectic considering the different activities we have had at the centre. Amongst those activities here are the injuries and medical attention we had to take care of and distribute:
The past couple of weeks have been sort of hectic considering the different activities we have had at the centre. Amongst those activities here are the injuries and medical attention we had to take care of and distribute:
- Firstly the Nyala's that we have been keeping in the boma had to be darted and released on the farm so they could breed with the others and bring new genes to the gene pool.
- We had an Eland ewe that lost the half of her jaw due to unknown reasons and she was pregnant. We had to dart her and her with the birth of the baby. She was so severely hurt that she had to be euthanized and due to the premature birth the baby unfortunately did not make it either.
- The 3rd picture is that of Alley with her drained apses. She has broken teeth and by eating she gives the open spaces the bacteria needed to form an apses. The teeth that are broken are luckily the milk teeth so as soon as they fall out and the new ones grow the problem will be solved.
- This Nyala was part of the game capturing on another farm and as he jumped the net, he got caught and broke his leg but in such a way that it had to be pushed back in to place and it needed a cask but unfortunately after hours of struggle he had to be euthanized because it could not be done.
- And last but not least, here are a couple of pictures of the burnt animals we had to treat and take care of as good as we possibly could.
B@rley project*
Dear readers.
The barley grains that I have bought from the supplier in Benoni have been planted alongside the aviary and they are doing very well. I first tried to germinate them in a plastic bowl with water and sunlight but it did not work as well as it was supposed to. I asked for worm water from Adrian and he gave me 25L and I have been using it for the seeds that I have planted in the soil.
The barley grains that I have bought from the supplier in Benoni have been planted alongside the aviary and they are doing very well. I first tried to germinate them in a plastic bowl with water and sunlight but it did not work as well as it was supposed to. I asked for worm water from Adrian and he gave me 25L and I have been using it for the seeds that I have planted in the soil.
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| The seeds in the plastic container. I tried to germinate them but they did not in the circumstances provided. |
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| The first years that helped me to prepare the soil and plant the seeds. |
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| The first growth after 3 days |
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| The length and amount of grass after 8 days of worm water and normal water every day. |
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| This is Peanut enjoying the green grass. |
Game capture at Sondela
Dear readers.
As it is just after winter and the veld is still looking dull, Sondela has a game capture week every year round this time to accommodate the carrying capacity of the veld. The old dry grass will die out and put back nutrients in the soil so that the new green grass can use it and grow to provide food for the summer. But this won't be possible if the animal population is too big for the veld to carry thus the game capture. By catching the game we teach the first years how to do mass capture and we get the extra experience of medications and chemical capture that we did not get last year.
The animals captured then gets transported to the companies that bought them and then Sondela gets the money for them. This system has worked now for a couple of years but there have come times that they had to catch for more then one week due to unforeseen circumstances which throws around the planning for the other activities. We had a lot of fun helping to catch the game and it was interesting to see how fast some students can run when they stress out and adrenaline kicks in!
As it is just after winter and the veld is still looking dull, Sondela has a game capture week every year round this time to accommodate the carrying capacity of the veld. The old dry grass will die out and put back nutrients in the soil so that the new green grass can use it and grow to provide food for the summer. But this won't be possible if the animal population is too big for the veld to carry thus the game capture. By catching the game we teach the first years how to do mass capture and we get the extra experience of medications and chemical capture that we did not get last year.
The animals captured then gets transported to the companies that bought them and then Sondela gets the money for them. This system has worked now for a couple of years but there have come times that they had to catch for more then one week due to unforeseen circumstances which throws around the planning for the other activities. We had a lot of fun helping to catch the game and it was interesting to see how fast some students can run when they stress out and adrenaline kicks in!
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| This is the view from the top of the transporting truck |
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| In this picture we need to hit the poles into the ground for our camoflage to be ready for the capture |
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| this is the post we stood at and we pulled the curtains closed from here. |
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| These are some of the animals we caught in the truck waiting to be transported. |
Newest family members
Dear readers.
At the wildlife centre we do not only take care of the animals that are here and that newly arrive for care, but we accept them into a family of care takers and animals that have formed a bond of trust. We have two new members with us that have arrived recently and one of them being a first for the centre:
Baby Eland
He does not have a name yet but he is a young strong male from another farm that could not care for his needs like our establishment can. He is not tame so it took some time for us to get a way of feeding the young guy seeing that he could severely hurt you if he felt the need to. He got used to the way we walk into the enclosure very slowly and how we just stand there with the bottle of milk stretched out to him. Eventually he got hungry enough to start getting closer by himself. He now walks up to you when you are in a halt and he sucks the teat finishing all his milk. He is becoming quite the young bull and who knows, maby one day he will even let us touch him.
Mongoose
The other newly arrived animal is much smaller and loves to make a lot of noise. She is a juvenile mongoose female with a handy capped front and back paw. She has been hand raised and the people that raised her felt that she needed a better life and so they brought her to the wildlife centre. She is a very sweet character and she loves the attention that we can provide her. She is taken to sleep inside during the night and she loves to eat meat and fruit pieces. Her name is Rosie and if she will be released on the farm one day is still undecided due to her physical disability.
At the wildlife centre we do not only take care of the animals that are here and that newly arrive for care, but we accept them into a family of care takers and animals that have formed a bond of trust. We have two new members with us that have arrived recently and one of them being a first for the centre:
Baby Eland
He does not have a name yet but he is a young strong male from another farm that could not care for his needs like our establishment can. He is not tame so it took some time for us to get a way of feeding the young guy seeing that he could severely hurt you if he felt the need to. He got used to the way we walk into the enclosure very slowly and how we just stand there with the bottle of milk stretched out to him. Eventually he got hungry enough to start getting closer by himself. He now walks up to you when you are in a halt and he sucks the teat finishing all his milk. He is becoming quite the young bull and who knows, maby one day he will even let us touch him.
Mongoose
The other newly arrived animal is much smaller and loves to make a lot of noise. She is a juvenile mongoose female with a handy capped front and back paw. She has been hand raised and the people that raised her felt that she needed a better life and so they brought her to the wildlife centre. She is a very sweet character and she loves the attention that we can provide her. She is taken to sleep inside during the night and she loves to eat meat and fruit pieces. Her name is Rosie and if she will be released on the farm one day is still undecided due to her physical disability.
Thursday, August 2, 2012
(Wild one)
Dear readers.
Getting back to work after an off weekend is tough but not when you have the friendly animals of the centre to come back to. Comming back also means we have to get used to any newly arrived animals and this past weekend was a parturition weekend. The farmyard kept sending us baby goats and sheep as soon as they were born because at one stage the baby is deformed and then the mother keeps rejecting the little one.
We need to make sure the babies get collostrum and we need to make sure that they are warm and comfortable with a mother or companion with them in the enclosure. In other news we have 2 new volenteers that have arrived and they have been a big help. They help in daily activities and sit and play with the babies so they can get used to human contact. We now have Ocean from France, Audri from France and a vet student from town that came to help us because the practice is quiet today.
Getting back to work after an off weekend is tough but not when you have the friendly animals of the centre to come back to. Comming back also means we have to get used to any newly arrived animals and this past weekend was a parturition weekend. The farmyard kept sending us baby goats and sheep as soon as they were born because at one stage the baby is deformed and then the mother keeps rejecting the little one.
We need to make sure the babies get collostrum and we need to make sure that they are warm and comfortable with a mother or companion with them in the enclosure. In other news we have 2 new volenteers that have arrived and they have been a big help. They help in daily activities and sit and play with the babies so they can get used to human contact. We now have Ocean from France, Audri from France and a vet student from town that came to help us because the practice is quiet today.
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| Scarlet our baby caracal. |
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| Choppie, the lamb found in the freestate |
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| Appollo, our serval kitten and companion to Scarlet. |
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| Feeding the kid goat on night shift. |
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| The mother goats in the outside boma |
The cats are getting very big and today we received an Nyala bull carcass that was dead at mosselleselle tent camp. We needed the meat and this profound event just happened to save us for another couple of days. The 1st year students are busy with the body and the centre is doing very well with boskos orders as ssb keeps asking for more packages. We also have a newly arrived Oryx once again and she is a couple of days old which means there is a good chance that she received collostrum from her mother and will survive.
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| The run over hare we found this morning, used as feed. |
$Barley grain$
Dear readers,
As 2nd years we get a lot of projects during the year that forms part of our course and at the moment we are busy researching a food culture we can use at the wildlife centre for our animals. My culture that I chose is specifically aimed on the feeding of herbivores and can also be used as enrichment for the cat species in their enclosures.
This grass will give us the oppertunity to beautify the centre, feed the animals organically and it will help enrich enclosures which will make them visitor friendly. At the moment I am busy with the research on how to grow it the best possible way at the centre and my research must be in the form of a presentation so I can present it to the manager for approval. I am very excited about this project and so I went to the supplier to check out the ways of growing the grass.
As 2nd years we get a lot of projects during the year that forms part of our course and at the moment we are busy researching a food culture we can use at the wildlife centre for our animals. My culture that I chose is specifically aimed on the feeding of herbivores and can also be used as enrichment for the cat species in their enclosures.
Barley grain is an organic grass that grows all year round and has no waste product after use. It can be fed to various types of species and is filled with nutrients and minerals. I want to grow this grass at the wildlife centre for feeding purposes and to enhance the aestethic value of the centre because at the moment we have a lot of open space covered in sand and dead leaves.
This grass will give us the oppertunity to beautify the centre, feed the animals organically and it will help enrich enclosures which will make them visitor friendly. At the moment I am busy with the research on how to grow it the best possible way at the centre and my research must be in the form of a presentation so I can present it to the manager for approval. I am very excited about this project and so I went to the supplier to check out the ways of growing the grass.
They have created a way of growing it with the least effort needed, they created a harvesting house that gives the seeds a place to grow and provides UV light and water which is all the seeds need to grow. The growth period in one of these houses is 6 days then you can take out the whole sheet and feed it leaving no waste products. When taking out a sheet you just replace it again with a new one so it can start to germinate which happens in 24 hours!
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| These are the seeds in the trays in which they grow inside the harvesting house. |
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| This is what the seed looks like after one day, this is a germinating seed. |
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| This is the harvesting house when opened with the UV light and irregation system it needs to help the seeds grow. |
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| This is your end product after 6 days of growing and this sheet can be fed just like this to various animals such as sheep, goat, horses and herbivorous wildlife. |
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